Anonymous ID: 1673a0 May 23, 2021, 10:41 p.m. No.13740308   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0318

George Floyd's family holds rally, march in brother's memoryRelatives of George Floyd, the African-American whose death triggered protests against racism and police brutality across the United States and around the world, gathered on Sunday in a rally to mark the first anniversary of his death.

 

Floyd died after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for more than eight minutes on May 25 last year. His dying words, "I can't breathe," became a rallying cry in a wave of street demonstrations against his killing.

 

Derek Chauvin, a white former Minneapolis policeman, was found guilty of murdering him. Chauvin and three other former Minneapolis police officers faced federal civil rights charges for their role in the arrest and murder of Floyd, according to court documents unsealed this month.

 

Floyd's family took to the streets of Minneapolis on Sunday and marched with hundreds of people in the first of several events planned nationwide to mark the anniversary of his death.

 

Many people in the crowd carried signs with pictures of Floyd and other Black people killed by police.

 

"It has been a long year. It has been a painful year," Floyd's sister, Bridgett Floyd, told the crowd.

 

"It has been very frustrating for me and my family for our lives to change in the blink of an eye - I still don't know why," she said, referring to her brother's death.

 

Other speakers at the event included Floyd family attorney Ben Crump and civil rights activist Reverend Al Sharpton, who has called for an end to racial inequality in the criminal justice system with the demand "get your knee off our necks."

 

"We want something coming out of Washington. We want something that will change federal law," Sharpton said on Sunday. "There's been an adjournment on justice for too long."

 

The George Floyd Memorial Foundation, a nonprofit launched by Floyd's siblings in September to fight racial inequality, is hosting a series of events in Minneapolis in the coming week to honor Floyd.

 

"George Floyd should not go down in history as someone with a knee on his neck, but as someone who broke the chain of police brutality and illegality," Sharpton said.

 

https://www.usnews.com/news/top-news/articles/2021-05-23/george-floyds-family-marches-to-mark-first-anniversary-of-his-death

Anonymous ID: 1673a0 May 23, 2021, 10:53 p.m. No.13740372   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0375 >>0417 >>0485 >>0677 >>0739 >>0871

Biden's solar ambitions collide with China labor complaints1 of 2 pages BEIJING – The Biden administration’s solar power ambitions are colliding with complaints the global industry depends on Chinese raw materials that might be produced by forced labor.

 

A big hurdle is polysilicon, used to make photovoltaic cells for solar panels. The global industry gets 45% of its supply from Xinjiang, the northwestern region where the ruling Communist Party is accused of mass incarceration of minorities and other abuses. Other parts of China supply 35%. Only 20% comes from U.S. and other producers.

 

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George Floyd's family holds rally, march in brother's memory

 

 

Biden’s climate envoy, John Kerry, says Washington is deciding whether to keep solar products from Xinjiang out of U.S. markets. That sets up a conflict with President Joe Biden’s plans to cut climate-changing carbon emissions by promoting solar and other renewable energy while also reducing costs.

 

In Xinjiang, more than 1 million Uyghurs and other members of predominantly Muslim ethnic groups have been forced into detention camps, according to foreign researchers and governments. Authorities are accused of forced sterilizations of minorities and of destroying mosques.

 

Chinese officials reject accusations of abuse and say the camps are for job training aimed at economic development and deterring radicalism.

 

U.S. and some Chinese solar vendors have pledged to avoid suppliers that might use forced labor. It isn’t clear, however, whether they can meet rising demand without Xinjiang, where Beijing won’t allow independent inspections of workplaces.

 

The biggest manufacturers all use raw materials from Xinjiang and have a "high risk of forced labor in their supply chains,” according to a May 14 report by researchers Laura T. Murphy and Nyrola Elimaat of Britain’s Sheffield Hallam University.

 

The possibility of forced labor “is a problem,” Kerry told U.S. legislators last week. He cited “solar panels that we believe in some cases are being produced by forced labor.”

 

Western governments have imposed travel and financial restrictions on Chinese officials blamed for abuses. The U.S. government has banned imports of cotton and tomatoes from Xinjiang, citing concerns over forced labor.

 

The administration was assessing whether to extend that ban to solar panels and raw materials from Xinjiang, Kerry said. He said he didn't know the status of that review.

 

At issue is the government's “labor transfer” program, which places workers in Xinjiang with companies.

 

Chinese officials say it is voluntary, but Murphy and Elimaat argue it takes place in “an environment of unprecedented coercion" and is "undergirded by the constant threat of re-education and internment.”

 

“Many indigenous workers are unable to refuse or walk away from these jobs,” their report says. It says the programs are “tantamount to forcible transfer of populations and enslavement.”

 

Murphy and Elimaat said they found 11 companies engaged in forced labor transfers of Uyghurs and other minorities and 90 Chinese and foreign enterprises whose supply chains are affected. They said manufacturers need to make “significant changes” if they want to avoid suppliers that use forced labor.

 

Murphy and Elimaat say the biggest global solar equipment manufacturers — JinkoSolar Inc., LONGi Green Energy Technology Co., Trina Solar Energy Co. and JA Solar Holdings Co. — might have forced labor in their supply chains.

 

Trina and JinkoSolar also have “possible labor transfers” in factories, while a JinkoSolar facility is in an industrial park that also has a prison, according to Murphy and Elimaat.

 

JinkoSolar, LONGi, Trina and JA Solar didn't immediately respond to questions about the report.

 

At the same time, a supply crunch as demand surges has boosted polysilicon prices more than 100% since January to a 9-year high.

 

The market is “already undersupplied,” Johannes Bernreuter, head of Germany’s Bernreuter Research, said in an email.

 

China is both the biggest global market for solar equipment and the biggest producer.

 

That reflects multibillion-dollar government spending over the past two decades to promote solar energy. The ruling party wants to curb reliance on imported oil and gas, which it sees as a security weakness, and take the lead in an emerging industry.

 

A supply glut as hundreds of Chinese manufacturers rushed into the industry 15 years ago drove prices down. That hurt Western competitors but accelerated adoption of solar in the United States and Europe.

 

Seven of the top 10 global producers are Chinese. Canadian Solar Inc. is registered in Canada but its production is in China. South Korea's Hanwha Q-Cells is No. 6.

 

https://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory/bidens-solar-ambitions-collide-china-labor-complaints-77866885

Anonymous ID: 1673a0 May 23, 2021, 10:53 p.m. No.13740375   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0381 >>0485 >>0677 >>0739 >>0871

>>13740372

Page 2 of 2

 

The only U.S. producer in the top 10, First Solar Inc., has no exposure to the Xinjiang polysilicon supply chain because the Tempe, Arizona, company uses thin film technology that requires no polysilicon.

 

Vendors serving U.S. and European markets probably can get enough polysilicon outside Xinjiang, Bernreuter said. But he said supplies might be squeezed if other countries impose the same requirement.

 

Potential non-Chinese suppliers include Germany’s Wacker Chemie AG and the Malaysian arm of South Korea's OCI Co.

 

However, those companies also buy polysilicon from Xinjiang's biggest supplier, Hoshine Silicon Industry Co., according to Murphy and Elimaat. They cited documents they said show Hoshine, also known as Hesheng, participates in “labor transfer.”

 

Hoshine didn't immediately respond to questions about the report.

 

U.S. solar equipment vendors have been trying since last year to overhaul supply chains to eliminate problem suppliers, according to their trade group, the Solar Energy Industries Association.

 

In February, 175 companies including the U.S. arms of JinkoSolar, LONGi, Trina and JA Solar signed a pledge to oppose use of forced labor by their suppliers.

 

Potential changes should be done by the end of June, according to the group’s president, Abigail Ross Hopper.

 

“If their customers and the U.S. government are demanding it, they will need to move quickly,” Ross Hopper told PV Magazine USA in February.

 

Bernreuter warned the Chinese government “might interfere” with an overhaul, though there is no sign that has happened.

Anonymous ID: 1673a0 May 23, 2021, 11:06 p.m. No.13740455   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Florida Woman Won't Be Outdone by Florida Man, Leads Cops in Nearly Naked High-Speed ChaseA woman was arrested in Florida on Saturday for allegedly leading law enforcement agencies on a high-speed chase through several counties, and she was reportedly wearing slightly more than just a grin.

 

The high-speed chase began Saturday morning when state troopers responded to a stolen vehicle alert from the sheriff's office in Gilchrist County, which is just west of Gainesville in the north-central part of the state.

 

The woman driving the car, later identified as Rachael Lynn Stefancich, 24, of Plant City, took off on southbound Interstate-75 through Sumter County.

 

One trooper eventually spotted Stefancich driving the stolen 2009 Cadillac sedan through Hernando County on I-75. As that trooper attempted to pull the car over, Stefancich then allegedly took the car up to 110 mph on a wild, multi-county chase.

 

The sedan eventually made its way to State Road 52 in Pasco County before it was stopped with a pursuit intervention technique (PIT) maneuver, and Stefancich was detained at that point, unclothed for the most part.

 

"Rachael Lynn Stefancich, 24, of Plant City, nearly fully unclothed, was immediately taken into custody and arrested for grand theft auto, reckless driving, fleeing & eluding, possession of methamphetamine and driving while license suspended," highway patrol said on WJTV. "Stefancich was later delivered to the Hernando County Jail."

 

Troopers say they found a glass pipe typically used for smoking methamphetamine, and what they believed to be meth also inside the vehicle. Tropers also said that her license was suspended, and that she she claimed the vehicle was that of her aunt, who allegedly allowed her to drive it.

 

The Florida Highway Patrol did not indicate which parts of Stefancich were clothed and which was visible.

 

"Florida Man" has become a moniker over the years to describe zany acts carried out by Florida males, from last week's boater in Key Largo dying after mangroves got lodged into his head to a man wielding a sword at sheriff's deputies, a naked man beating a "peeping Tom" to death, a drunken Florida couple having sex in the backseat of a cop car after a DUI arrest and people offering bags of marijuana in exchange for food at fast-food restaurants.

 

Saturday's arrest of Stefancich doesn't necessarily make her an official "Florida woman" unless she has been convicted. She has certainly kept the torch of Florida woman lit, though.

 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/florida-woman-wont-be-outdone-by-florida-man-leads-cops-in-nearly-naked-high-speed-chase/ar-AAKjqzQ